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Seven confirmed dead and one missing after capsized boat in California's Lake Tahoe

Authorities said that at least seven people died and that one person remains missing after a pleasure vessel capsized in California's Lake Tahoe over the weekend during a sudden storm that brought high winds and large swells.

A 27-foot-long Chris-Craft motor boat with 10 people on board overturned near D.L. Bliss State Park was affected by the micro-burst that hit the deepwater alpine lakes, according to U.S. Coast Guard.

El Dorado County Sheriff's Office posted a statement online that said two boaters survived, but seven died. One of them was found dead on Sunday and another was still missing by Monday. The El Dorado County Sheriff's Office said that the identities of victims were kept secret until their next of kin had been notified.

The weather on the lake had been relatively clear until the sudden squall struck, bringing with it 30-knot winds, eight-foot waves, and a 30 degree Fahrenheit drop in air temperature.

After searching the waters for over 12 hours, the Coast Guard decided to call off the search for any additional survivors.

The vessel capsized near Bliss State Park, off the southwest shore of Lake Tahoe. Lake Tahoe is the sixth largest body of freshwater by volume in the United States, after the Great Lakes of the Midwest and second deepest, after Crater Lake, in Oregon.

Tahoe is a major outdoor tourist attraction that straddles the border between California and Nevada, in the Sierra Nevada Mountain range. It also ranks as North America's largest alpine lakes. Reporting by Steve Gorman, Los Angeles; editing by Michael Perry

(source: Reuters)